It has some properties of a liquid (the organization)
and some properties of a solid (the flow rate).

The common mis-belief is that old glass windows are wider at the bottom because they have flowed a bit. Not true. The old style of creating glass panes was to puddle the glass which typically had a thicker middle than edges. The glaziers were merely very good at selecting glass panes with approximately the same "wedge" and orienting them the same way (almost always with the thicker part down). This made the windows easier to see through without getting a headache.
____________BOINC WIKI

Glass is commonly believed to be a slow-flowing liquid. The most often cited evidence for this is Cathedral windows (as he mentioned) being thicker at the bottom then the top.
It isn't so, Glass is a solid. If the glass in medieval church windows has had time to flow, then glass found in Egyptian tombs would be a puddle, which it isn't.
I believed the Liquid Glass fallacy, until i had it explained to me in exacting detail by one of the Chemistry professors.
____________Life on earth is the global equivalent of not storing things in the fridge.